Arsenal’s 10-man masterclass didn’t beat Manchester City – but it might have changed the title race

Manchester City 2-2 Arsenal: An enthralling, fiercely competitive game was drawn after John Stones’s late goal ended the 10-man Gunners’ stubborn resistance

Richard Jolly
Etihad Stadium
Monday 23 September 2024 02:11 EDT
Comments
Pep Guardiola and Mikel Arteta frustrated by officials during action-packed draw

Your support helps us to tell the story

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.

At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.

The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

Your support makes all the difference.

It was the last kick of a ball by a Manchester City player, John Stones latching on to the rebound after Jakub Kiwior had flung himself into the path of Mateo Kovacic’s shot, just beating the heroic David Raya. Arsenal were seconds away from a statement win, from a seismic victory. Instead, a 98th-minute goal extended City’s unbeaten run at home to 48 games. Their gap to Arsenal remained at two points. After extraordinary drama, nothing changed. And yet, at various points, in different ways, it felt as though everything had.

As Arsenal’s previous trip to the Etihad Stadium brought a 0-0 draw, the scoreline may not suggest they produced a defensive masterclass. Yet they did: a magnificent rearguard action almost brought the ultimate reward, in the sort of result that would reshape a season. As it was, they channelled the spirit of George Graham’s sides in an epic display of obduracy, only to receive a reminder that even when City feel uninspired – and perhaps because Arsenal made them look uninspired – the Gunners still couldn’t kill them off.

John Stones turns home City’s late second goal
John Stones turns home City’s late second goal (Reuters)

Arsenal nevertheless displayed the substance in different forms of adversity to indicate that, if they are to depose City as champions, their hopes need not rest on 115 charges, or even 129. Forget the courtroom, Arsenal demonstrated they could win the title on the pitch. They first went a goal down, later a man down. They emerged in enormous credit and yet the pivotal incident for the campaign may have come when Rodri, the City invincible, went off with his side winning 1-0, a knee injury potentially having far greater consequences than an individual result. City famously don’t lose with Rodri playing: with him watching on, the substitute Stones averted defeat. For Haaland, a 100th City goal came in double-quick time – 10 minutes into the match – and yet became a footnote. Other occasions will be dominated by his statistics. This was not.

City and Arsenal cancelled each other out; but not in the way expected. If City suffered the loss of one talisman, Arsenal lost various kinds: minus injured captain Martin Odegaard, they saw Leandro Trossard senselessly sent off and then sacrificed the stand-in skipper Bukayo Saka. They spent the second half playing 5-4-0, camped around their own box, showing such resistance to indicate they may be the best defensive team in the world. City had 33 shots, but Arsenal largely restricted them to wayward long-range efforts.

John Stones turns to celebrate after scoring Manchester City’s leveller
John Stones turns to celebrate after scoring Manchester City’s leveller (Getty Images)

And it was a day defined by Arsenal defenders: in both boxes, too. The familiar complaint is that Arteta does not sign his version of Haaland, a potent striker, but a left-back and a centre-back scored. Criticised for showing too little attacking intent in March’s stalemate at the Etihad, Arsenal found the net even in the absence of their injured creator Odegaard. For Riccardo Calafiori, a wonderful curling shot was a goal on his full debut. For Gabriel Magalhaes, a towering header illustrated why he is the most prolific defender in the division. It was redemptive, after Haaland accelerated away from him to score, and yet another set-piece strike for Arsenal’s dead-ball specialists. And yet it was from the second phase of a quickly-taken injury time corner that City levelled.

Erling Haaland knocks Manchester City into the lead
Erling Haaland knocks Manchester City into the lead (Getty)
Rodri writhes in pain on the ground before being replaced
Rodri writhes in pain on the ground before being replaced (Reuters)

It was cruel for Arsenal. The brilliant William Saliba was the outstanding player on the pitch. Behind him, David Raya added to his compendium of fine saves with a diving stop to deny Erling Haaland. He twice thwarted Josko Gvardiol, first blocking a drive, then parrying a sweetly-struck volley. Raya is in stupendous form, but he was also superbly protected.

He was beaten early on, though. City began wonderfully. Ilkay Gundogan was outstanding at the start, volleying just wide after his own deft flick, curling a free kick against the post. Savinho was terrific before the break, his skill too much for Trossard when he collected his first caution, supplying the pass when Haaland sprinted clear to prod a shot past Raya.

Riccardo Calafiori celebrates after scoring Arsenal’s equaliser
Riccardo Calafiori celebrates after scoring Arsenal’s equaliser (Getty Images)
Gabriel headed Arsenal in front from a corner (Martin Rickett/PA)
Gabriel headed Arsenal in front from a corner (Martin Rickett/PA) (PA Wire)

Then came the Arsenal comeback. It amounted to a chastening outing for Kyle Walker: complaining as Arsenal took a free kick quickly, he allowed Gabriel Martinelli too much room to find Calafiori, who curled a shot from 20 yards into the top corner. With similar precision and rather more frustration, Guardiola booted his seat in the dugout. Then Walker lost Gabriel as he headed in Saka’s corner.

Still later in injury time – or Rodri time, as it stemmed from the time Kai Havertz and Thomas Partey caught him – Trossard bundled into Bernardo Silva and then, in an unwanted echo of Declan Rice’s dismissal against Brighton, kicked the ball away. Michael Oliver, another with an eventful afternoon, expelled him.

John Stones celebrates after firing home Manchester City’s equaliser
John Stones celebrates after firing home Manchester City’s equaliser (AP)

Arteta reshaped his team, withdrawing Havertz into midfield, playing without the ball, defending defiantly. For Guardiola, it may have been a reminder of facing Jose Mourinho’s 10-man Inter in the 2010 Champions League semi-finals, but with a different ending. Arsenal celebrated blocks and interceptions; but not victory. They know what it is like to be denied at the death by City, topping the table for 248 days two seasons ago, finishing one point behind them last year. Perhaps, come May, Stones’s goal will be the decisive moment. But at the least, City have further proof they face a formidable rival.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in